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No Favre looking over Rodgers' shoulder now

Packers quarterback moves away from pressure of competing with legend

Image: Aaron Rodgers
Matthew Ludtke / AP file
With Brett Favre gone to the New York spotlight, the only quarterback playing behind Aaron Rodgers, left, at Packers training camp was rookie Brian Brohm, right.
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updated 6:04 p.m. ET Aug. 8, 2008

GREEN BAY, Wis. - Aaron Rodgers needed an extra squirt of antiseptic spray for his sore throat before speaking, but the lump from having to compete for his job is gone, jettisoned with Brett Favre to New York.

Rodgers is right back where he began in March. He’s the starting quarterback of the Green Bay Packers. That doesn’t mean the pressure has diminished — well, maybe a little.

“My job is going to be difficult either way. There’s a lot of pressure to just be a starting quarterback in this league,” Rodgers said Friday. “I’m still following Brett’s legacy, regardless of the fact if he’s here, retired or like he is in New York now.

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“There’s high expectations on myself, on our team and I think it’s still going to be a difficult situation as far as the pressure outside this locker room that’s put on me.”

For the first time, though, the fans that showed up to watch training camp practice at the NFL’s smallest outpost gave him a break, besides a lone heckler who kept riding the organization’s “mistake.” There were no “Save Brett” signs and the number of No. 4 jerseys were about even with Rodgers’ No. 12.

Rodgers and the rest of the offense looked crisp, too. Wide receiver Greg Jennings, who had emerged last season as one of Favre’s favorite targets, made a nifty one-handed grab for a touchdown for his new QB during a no-huddle drill.

Rodgers argued that the trade had nothing to do with the offense’s sudden improvement in practice, but the grin gave him away despite his efforts to deny it.

“It was good to get a resolution to the whole thing. It’s been definitely on all of our minds. We’ve had to talk about it a lot, throughout the training camp,” Rodgers said. “Everybody in the locker room. We’re happy for Brett that he gets to still play and we’re going to move forward together as a team.”

Packers coach Mike McCarthy didn’t answer his first Favre-related question for several minutes. He had no comment about Favre in a Jets jersey, but was relieved to get past explaining why the organization traded the face of the franchise for a conditional draft pick late Wednesday night.

“A sense of relief? You could say (it) in a lot of ways. I’m about press conferenced out, number one. That’s something, it’s a responsibility, I understand, but it was something that the situation needed to be resolved and it was nice to get to a finality of that,” McCarthy said. “I’m relieved that we’re talking about football, our football team, and that’s what the focus needs to be on.”

Nine veterans had the morning off, which included the core group of players who’d been with Favre the longest, like right tackle Mark Tauscher and wide receiver Donald Driver.

Rodgers, who had only been under Favre for three years and watched the team reach the NFC championship game last season, said that he’s learned from the experience over the last month.

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“I’m just reassured of the fact that things happen for a reason, just to trust God in every situation and try and remain patient and even keeled, because there’s going to be ups and downs in life as in football and the things you can’t control are the things often you want to worry about the most,” Rodgers said. “But it’s really useless to worry about those because they’re really out of your control. This situation was a prime example of that.”

The Packers’ first round pick in 2005, Rodgers heard the news of the trade at the St. Norbert College dorms, where the team stays during training camp. He was in the middle of his cribbage game with Korey Hall, John Kuhn and Tauscher.

It put to rest any talk of a quarterback competition for a job handed to him after Favre announced his retirement in a tearful news conference on March 6.

Still, Rodgers said he would have welcomed Favre back and prepared for a competition, even though he acknowledged the coaching staff never told him what the plan was if Favre would have stayed in Green Bay.

“The thing that would’ve happened potentially is a quarterback competition, that was kind of the worst option, I guess you could say, which wasn’t even a bad option at all,” Rodgers said. “They told me I was the starter back in March and I worked hard to figure out ways to exert my leadership on this team, get to know guys a little more.

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“When all this stuff kind of went on last week, I realized the very worst case scenario was being able, having to compete for my job. So that wasn’t a bad situation.”

Now it’s just a much better one.

Notes: Packers RB Ryan Grant sat out practice with a strained hamstring that McCarthy characterized as “slight.” Grant missed the first week of training camp before signing a four-year contract potentially worth $30 million. ... Green Bay signed CB Scorpio Babers on Friday. Babers took the spot Favre vacated on the 80-man roster when he was traded.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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